Finally, at long last, Walter Koenig’s star is on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and Planet Xpo put together a mini celebration for the unveiling this past weekend.

Deep Geeking: This week, Tim, Jeremy and Agent 6 go in-depth discussing The Psi Corps trilogy, written by J. Gregory Keyes. The books in the series are “Dark Genesis: The Birth of the Psi Corps”, “Deadly Relations: Bester Ascendant” and “Final Reckoning: The Fate of Bester”.

This trilogy tells the story of the sudden appearance of human telepaths on Earth, and political and societal events leading up to the creation of Psi Corps, then the story arc telling the rise of Alfred Bester through the Corps, and what happened to both in the aftermath of the Telepath War.

Submitting your own Feedback: If you have any suggestions or comments, please let us know! Call, or just email us a comment you’ve recorded yourself!

Lurker’s Guide 2.0: Summer is expanding the documentation to be covered at Lurker’s Guide 2.0, the major change being converting the episode guide into a full Wiki with cross-referenced topics, tidbits and everything you’d want in a Wiki. She’s also still searching for pictures of rare collectibles, photos of magazine covers and toys, and all sorts of other B5 goodies that didn’t get included in the original guide during the years after Crusade. Let her know if you want to lend a hand.

More Parody/Filk Songs Wanted: If you know of any more B5-related fan songs out there, definitely let us know, so we can let other B5 fans know where to buy them! And if those CDs are out of print, let’s brainstorm on ways to get those songs back out there for fans!

I still don’t know why I didn’t have Book 2 Deadly Relations. I know I read it, but for some reason I must have borrowed it from someone at the time. Either that or I lent it to someone and never got it back. In any case, the situation was remedied this weekend when I saw it at someone’s table at Capclave and picked it up for $1.

You know, Bester’s career as a book critic in the 3rd book is almost predictive of the state of modern film critics. Think about it,. shortly before the final act when Garibaldi catches up to him, Bester finds himself in a quandary; he actually likes the book he just read. Except, he has built such a reputation for snark and cynicism as a reviewer… I see this in film reviews all the time. The score will be something like 4 or 4.5 out of 5 stars, yet the review proper will be almost nothing but nitpicky complaints.